Five American privateers, who had left Boston…
July 1782 CE
Captain Stoddard’s ship is the schooner Scammel, which has sixteen guns and sixty men. (Another vessel is the Hero.)
Stoddard organizes both a land and sea assault of the town.
The vessels first land at Red Head, two miles outside of the town and soldiers begin to march toward the town.
The vessels then move toward a frontal assault on the town.
The Lunenburg militia is led by Colonel John Creighton and Major D. C. Jessen.
Colonel Creighton and five other militia men occupy the eastern blockhouse and begin firing at the approaching land assault.
Several of Captain Stoddard’s privateers are wounded.
The landed fleet of privateers then rounds East Point.
The vessels land and quickly take control of the western blockhouse and establish themselves at Blockhouse Hill.
Captain Creighton and others in the blockhouse are cannonaded into silence and the blockhouse burned.
Colonel Creighton surrenders and is taken prisoner along with two other men aboard Captain Stoddard’s vessel Scammel.
Resistance is also offered by Major D. C. Jessen.
He was initially held up in his home, which the privateers fire full of bullets.
He escapes and his house is looted.
Major Jessen assembles with a militia behind the hill overlooking the town.
A militia from La Have under the command of Major Joseph Pernette also advances toward Lunenburg to join Major Jessen.
Captain Stoddard sends a message to Jensen and Pernette that if they advance on the town, all the homes will be burned.
To ensure his threat is not idle, Captain Stoddard burns down Major Jessen’s home.
Captain Stoddard’s privateers loot the town and destroy what remains.
The Reverend Johann Gottlob Schmeisser tries to intervene and is bound by the privateers and placed in the middle of town.
Relief comes when Lt. Governor Hamond dispatches from Halifax three ships under the command of Captain Douglass of the HMS Chatham (1758), one of which has two hundred Hessian soldiers aboard.
Captain Stoddard begins the retreat.
Despite not having received a ransom, Captain Stoddard will release Colonel Creighton and the other prisoners after they arrive in Boston.
Sylvia, an African working for Creighton, is a significant part of Lunenburg's resistance to the raid. (Whether Sylvia was a free black or a slave is unknown.)
She assists in supplying munitions to Creighton at the blockhouse and shelters his son, and after being released from being captured by Stoddard, she had also protected the home and possessions of Major Jessen.